Music Sound

RSS Feeds

Soprano

In music, a soprano is a singer with a voice ranging approximately from the A below middle C to high C two octaves above middle C (i.e. A3-C6). Some sopranos can go much higher, up to F6. In four part chorale style harmony, the soprano takes the highest part, which usually encompasses the melody.

The word "soprano" generally refers to a female singer of this highest vocal range and to her voice. Male singers whose voices have not yet changed are known either as "boy sopranos" or, in the Anglican and Roman Catholic traditions, as trebles. Some adult male singers use a special technique without using falsetto in order to sing in this high range, and they are known as sopranists.

Vocal ranges
Female ranges
Soprano
Mezzo-soprano
Contralto

Male ranges

Sopranist
Alto
Tenor
Baritenor
Baritone
Bass-baritone
Bass


Historically women were not allowed to sing in the Church, so the soprano roles were given to young boys, and later to castrati, who were men whose larynxes had been fixed in a pre-adolescent state through the process of castration.

More generally, a soprano is a relatively high-pitched member of a group of similar instruments (for example, the soprano saxophone).

Contents

Types of soprano and soprano roles in operas

In opera, the character and timbre of soprano voices are often categorized according to the German Fach system. However, several roles are regularly sung by sopranos who are considered to belong to another "Fach". For example, Lyric Coloratura Sopranos and Full Lyrics often sing Lucia (Lucia di Lammermoor). Sopranos usually play the heroine in opera. The soprano Fächer, with examples of respective roles, are:

Soprano
Soprano
  • Soubrette: A sweet, lightweight voice whose range is mostly in middle voice. Plays comedic, saucy, but likable characters.
    • Adele (Die Fledermaus)
      Amor (Orfeo ed Euridice)
      Ännchen (Der Freischütz)
      Belinda (Dido and Aeneas)
      Despina (Così fan tutte)
      Lisa (La Sonnambula)
      Marzellina (Fidelio)
      Musetta (La bohème)
      Nannetta (Falstaff)
      Olympia (Les contes d'Hoffmann)
      Pamina (Die Zauberflöte)
      Servilia (La clemenza di Tito)
      Susanna (Le Nozze di Figaro)
      Tamyris (Il re pastore)
      Zerlina (Don Giovanni)
  • Lyric Coloratura: A light, acrobatic voice, with a range into the 6th octave.
    • Adina (L'Elisir d'Amore)
      Agrippina (Agrippina)
      Alcina (Alcina)
      Alminera (Rinaldo)
      Amina (La Sonnambula)
      Blondchen (Die Entführung aus dem Serail)
      Celia (Lucio Silla)
      Elisa (Il re pastore)
      Elvira (I Puritani)
      Gilda (Rigoletto)
      Ilia (Idomeneo)
      Juliette (Roméo et Juliette)
      Lakmé (Lakmé)
      Lucia (Lucia di Lammermoor)
      Magda (La Rondine)
      Norina (Don Pasquale)
      Ophélie (Hamlet)
      Oskar (Un Ballo in Maschera)
      Sofie (Der Rosenkavalier)
      Zerbinetta (Ariadne auf Naxos)
  • Dramatic Coloratura: An acrobatic voice with powerful dramatic qualities, with a range up to F6.
    • Anne (The Rake's Progress)
      Cleopatra (Giulio Cesare)
      Donna Anna (Don Giovanni)
      Fiordiligi (Così fan tutte)
      Königin der Nacht (Queen of the Night) (Die Zauberflöte)
      Konstanze (Die Entführung aus dem Serail)
      Lady Macbeth (Macbeth)
      Leonora (Il Trovatore)
      Lucrezia (Lucrezia Borgia)
      Mathilde (Guillaume Tell)
      Norma (Norma)
      Rosalinda (Die Fledermaus)
      Violetta (La Traviata)
  • Full Lyric Soprano: A sweet, graceful voice, with range similar to that of the soubrette but with a stronger quality, and stronger upper register. Reserved for ingenues and other sympathetic characters.
    • Agathe (Der Freischütz)
      Antonia (Les contes d'Hoffmann)
      Contessa (Figaro)
      Euridice (Orfeo ed Euridice)
      Liù (Turandot)
      Manon (Manon)
      Marguerite (Faust)
      Martha (Martha)
      Micaëla (Carmen)
      Mimi (La bohème)
      Nedda (Pagliacci)
      Pamina (Die Zauberflöte)
      Zaide (Zaide)
  • Spinto Soprano: A full lyric voice that can be pushed to dramatic climaxes.
    • Agathe (Der Freischütz)
      Aida (Aïda)
      Alice Ford (Falstaff)
      Butterfly (Madama Butterfly)
      Desdemona (Othello)
      Donna Elvira (Don Giovanni)
      Elisabetta (Don Carlos)
      Manon (Manon Lescaut)
      Margherita (Mefistofele)
      Rusalka (Rusalka)
      Tatajana (Eugene Onegin)
      The Marschellin (Der Rosenkavalier)
      Wally (La Wally)
  • Dramatic soprano: A powerful, rich, emotive voice. Used for the heroic, tragic, and/or victimized women of opera. Range from Bb3 or A3 to C6.
    • Abgaille (Nabucco)
      Amelia (Un Ballo in Maschera)
      Ariadne (Ariadne auf Naxos)
      Butterfly (Madama Butterfly)
      Elsa (Lohengrin)
      Gioconda (La Gioconda)
      Kundry (Parsifal)
      Leonora (La Forza del Destino)
      Leonore (Fidelio)
      Santuzza (Cavalleria Rusticana)
      Sieglinde (Die Walküre)
      Tosca (Tosca)
  • Wagnerian soprano: A dramatic voice that can assert itself as an instrument over a large orchestra (over eighty pieces). Usually a mythic heroine.
    • Brünnhilde (Die Walküre, Siegfried, Götterdämmerung)
      Elektra (Elektra)
      Elizabeth (Tannhäuser)
      Isolde (Tristan und Isolde)
      Salome (Salome)
      Senta (Der fliegende Holländer)
      Turandot (Turandot)

Two types of soprano especially dear to the French are the Dugazon and the Falcon, which are intermediate voice types between the soprano and the mezzo soprano: a Dugazon is a darker-colored soubrette, a Falcon a darker-colored soprano drammatico.

Famous sopranos

Soprano
Soprano

See also

Home | Up | Next